Relying on input from a panel of Catholic leaders in religious education, the Educational Testing Service designed a series of surveys on Catholic religious education, or catechesis. The surveys sought to answer questions in the following areas: the desired outcomes of catechesis; the effectiveness of programs in fostering these outcomes; the problems and issues facing catechetical leaders; the important characteristics of religious education/catechesis today; the use of video technology; and steps to improve the enterprise. This data file contains the Survey of Diocesan Leaders, which was completed by persons in leadership roles in youth ministry, catechesis and religious education at the diocesan level.

A random sample of 4,000 parishes, from the universe of 17,963 parishes in the United States, was selected in phase one of the study. Questionnaires were sent to the pastor of each parish. After one follow-up mailing to nonrespondents, surveys were received from 1,822 parishes, resulting in a response rate of 46 percent.

In the second phase of the study, a subset of 136 parishes was selected to be studied in greater detail. This sample was later expanded to 194 to replace parishes not participating. The final group of respondents included 91 participating parishes.

Pastors in participating parishes were contacted and asked to identify a parish study coordinator (who was often the director of religious education) and to nominate up to 10 exemplary adult parishioners who were "representative of the desired outcomes of Catholic religious education." The parish coordinator was asked to do the following: to distribute catechist/religion teacher surveys to school and parish program staff; send a random sample of adult/households in the parish (following detailed steps for drawing this sample) to the Educational Testing Service; and distribute surveys to the pastor, director of religious education, and the elementary school principal (in parishes with schools).

The content of the surveys varied by sample. Given below is a list of the topics that were repeated across surveys.

Notes:Randomly sampled adult parishioners and exemplary adult parishioners received the same survey.The emphasis in this study was on program effectiveness. The assumption that guided this study was that answers to questions about programs can best be found in parishes that are strong in their program offerings. Thus, the sample used was by design biased in favor of more active parishes. The parishes in the sample response group were indeed those that more frequently offered religious education and formation programs and more often had full-time, salaried directors of religious education. These parishes also tended to be larger in size, better educated, and more often suburban (Supplementary Final Report of a National Study of Catholic Religious Education/Catechesis, 1994:77).

The original intent was to collect data on youth by including youth surveys with parent surveys (i.e. randomly sampled adult parishioners). When the youth did not respond in any numbers, a follow-up effort surveyed youth in school and parish class groups and "less active" students identified by parish staff (Supplementary Final Report of a National Study of Catholic Religious Education/Catechesis, 1994:78).